2009 Ephemeris
Full-size ephemerides.
For each month of the year 2009, the ephemeris shows the tropical longitude of the Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto and North Node of the Moon; sign ingresses (planets or bodies changing sign); planetary stations; lunar ingresses; Void Moon; lunar phases; and eclipses.
Note: Time is Midnight Eastern Time.
2008 Ephemeris<2009 Ephemeris>2010 Ephemeris
2008 Ephemeris<2009 Ephemeris>2010 Ephemeris
More Ephemerides:
- 2005 Ephemeris
- 2006 Ephemeris
- 2007 Ephemeris
- 2008 Ephemeris
- 2009 Ephemeris
- 2010 Ephemeris
- 2011 Ephemeris
- 2012 Ephemeris
- 2013 Ephemeris
- 2014 Ephemeris
- 2015 Ephemeris
- 2016 Ephemeris
- 2017 Ephemeris
- 2018 Ephemeris
- 2019 Ephemeris
- 2020 Ephemeris
- 2021 Ephemeris
- 2022 Ephemeris
- 2023 Ephemeris
- 2024 Ephemeris
- 2025 Ephemeris
- 2026 Ephemeris
- 2027 Ephemeris
- 2028 Ephemeris
- 2029 Ephemeris
- 2030 Ephemeris
The tables in the above ephemeris explained:
The ephemerides above display each planet or point by degree and sign (longitude) at Midnight in the Eastern time zone at a daily rate.
Retrograde planets are marked with a red Rx symbol. The D symbol will appear when that same planet turns direct, but won’t appear otherwise–a planet is assumed to be direct unless it’s marked with an Rx symbol.
The lower left table shows sign changes and retrograde/direct activity. First, sign changes are displayed in the table under the ephemeris under the title “Ingresses.” Second, the “Stations” section shows planets and precise dates and times when they change direction, either retrograde (marked with an Rx) or direct (marked with a D). These appear only if there is a directional change.
The lower middle table shows the lunar sign ingresses (or Moon sign changes). Note that these are separate from planetary ingresses due to the frequency that the Moon changes signs (approximately every 2.5 days!). The void Moon times are also displayed.
In the lower right table of the ephemeris under the title, “Lunar Phases & Eclipses,” lists the lunar phases (New, First Quarter, Full, and Last Quarter) dates, times, and zodiacal positions. If there is a Solar or Lunar eclipse in that particular month, you’ll find its date and positions in this table, below the lunar phases. Otherwise, you can assume there isn’t an eclipse that month (eclipses occur in sets approximately every 5-6 months).
See also:
Declinations Graph for this Month
Lilly Strengths Graph for this Month
Lunar Cycles Graph for this Month
Back to This Month’s Ephemeris